While not strictly related to programming, this is very surprising and harmful behavior that demonstrates how important thinking about edge cases is.
While not strictly related to programming, this is very surprising and harmful behavior that demonstrates how important thinking about edge cases is.
What is the use case of a “Undo Copy” feature anyway? I can see some cases that I’d want to “Undo Cut” but why do we need another shortcut to delete a file just because it was copied?
For example, if you Control+V-d the files into the wrong folder in windows explorer. I’ve undoed copies many times this way.
However, the post doesn’t mention whether this behavior is present with Ctrl+Z as well. If so, that’s even words, because you wouldn’t even get to read the action you’re about to perform.